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Graphic photos displayed as serial-murder trial opens

A prosecutor vows to prove the defendant killed 11 in the 1980s and 1990s.

April 04, 2007|John Spano, Times Staff Writer

Displaying gruesome photographs of strangled women with bloated faces, a prosecutor told jurors Tuesday that he would prove Chester Dewayne Turner was one of Los Angeles' most prolific serial killers.

"These are the victims of a killer," said Deputy Dist. Atty. Bobby Grace, gesturing at the photos. "Today we can say the name of that killer: Chester Turner."


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Turner, 39, wearing a neatly pressed blue shirt, watched closely as the prosecutor's statements launched a trial that could lead to a death sentence.

The defendant has pleaded not guilty to committing 11 murders in the 1980s and '90s. Prosecutors said they are prepared to prove that DNA links him to the deaths. Turner's lawyer, John Tyre, reserved the right to make his statement to the jury later.

All the victims were found strangled, Grace said. Turner, 6 feet 2 and 260 pounds, used his hands and an electrical cord to kill his early victims, the prosecutor added.

Grace painted a picture of a spreading crack cocaine epidemic in a time of "joblessness and hopelessness which created despair among the residents of South Los Angeles." Most of the slain women had used cocaine and were found partially nude; many have been identified as prostitutes.

"Many residents wanted to escape from what was going on. To do that, some of them turned to drugs," Grace said.

Turner's defense is expected to contend that he was a drug dealer and that most of his customers were prostitutes who often paid in trade, explaining the DNA evidence.

Jurors in the trial at downtown's criminal courts building won't hear how police earlier arrested another man in three of the killings they now attribute to Turner. David Allen Jones was convicted and served 11 years before DNA tests cleared him and he was freed in March 2004 from prison.

Jones has an IQ of 60 and speaks like a third-grader, according to his lawyer, yet he confessed after interrogation to being the serial killer who had cleverly evaded detection for years. Jones received $720,000 in compensation for his false conviction and time in prison.

Grace used a projector to map sites of the crimes, as well as four places where Turner lived, along the Figueroa Street corridor north of the 105 Freeway.

Then he said the last two victims died seven miles away, in downtown Los Angeles around skid row. "Lo and behold, that's where Chester Turner was living and working at the time in 1998 when these victims are killed," the prosecutor said.

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